Vitalii Sediuk poses at the AP office on Monday, June 2, 2014, in Los Angeles. Sediuk told The Associated Press in an interview Monday that he never intended to hurt Pitt and was merely trying to give the actor a hug when he toppled over a barricade and jostled with the actor at the red carpet film premiere of the film “Maleficent.” (Photo by Casey Curry/Invision/AP)

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Vitalii Sediuk says he never intended to hurt Pitt and was merely trying to give the actor a hug when he toppled over a barricade and jostled with the actor at the red carpet film premiere of the film “Maleficent."

LOS ANGELES — The ex-journalist who was arrested after jostling with Brad Pitt at a film premiere last week said today he was merely trying to give the actor a hug and didn’t mean him any harm.

Vitalii Sediuk, a former Ukrainian television reporter, told The Associated Press in an interview that he was in a fan area of the event that was open to the public when he went in to give the actor a hug. Sediuk, 25, has gained a reputation for outlandish pranks on red carpets in Moscow, Los Angeles and last month, at the Cannes Film Festival when he crawled underneath America Ferrera’s dress at a film premiere.

His contact with Pitt, which caused the actor to lose balance while he was signing autographs at the “Maleficent” film premiere on Wednesday, led to Sediuk’s arrest. He spent two days in jail, where he said he watched television coverage of the incident, before pleading no contest to battery and unlawful activity at a sporting or entertainment event Friday. He was sentenced Friday to three years of probation, a year’s worth of psychiatric counseling and ordered to stay away from Pitt.

“I’m a normal guy,” Sediuk said. “I’m not crazy.”

The 6-foot-2 native of Boryspil, Ukraine said he initially wasn’t near the front of the fan area where Pitt was signing autographs last week, but saw paparazzi leave one area and headed for it. He said he stood on a metal railing and reached over to give Pitt a hug, toppling onto the carpet area as security grabbed him.

Sediuk was attempting to grab Pitt’s crotch and the actor gave him a couple of hits to the back of the head, the actor wrote in a statement to People magazine after Sediuk’s interview.

“I don’t mind an exhibitionist, but if this guy keeps it up he’s going to spoil it for the fans who have waited up all night for an autograph or a selfie, because it will make people more wary to approach a crowd,” Pitt wrote. “And he should know, if he tries to look up a woman’s dress again, he’s going to get stomped.”

Sediuk said his antics should lead to a re-examination of security procedures at high-profile entertainment events.

The former journalist has hugged the crotches of Bradley Cooper and Leonardo Di Caprio and crashed the 2013 Grammy Awards said the primary purpose for his pranks is entertainment. “I’m doing this for fun,” he said.

He avoided a similar stunt at the “Maleficent” premiere because he said he knew children would be at the event.

Sediuk has been fired by the Ukrainian television station 1+1 and said he does not know what his next steps will be. He said he intends to spend the next few months focusing on fulfilling his sentence in the Pitt incident, which include community service and a restraining order preventing him from going near Hollywood events.

He said he would like to remain in the entertainment field, working as a movie director or appearing in a reality show, and would continue work as a journalist — if anyone will hire him.

Sediuk said he wouldn’t give up pranks, but knew that his days of getting close to celebrities in Hollywood were at an end. Any future stunts would be done legally, he said, and “in a polite way.”

He said his antics should lead stars and event organizers to reconsider their security procedures.

“Don’t get offended at me. Don’t get mad at me. And just to be thankful that I show it’s easy to get access to you and maybe you have to tighten security,” Sediuk said. He said celebrities should be cautious when talking to fans. “Obviously, I don’t want to say, ‘Don’t talk to fans.‘ But (be) cautious.”

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